Allometry of behavior and niche differentiation among congeneric African antelopes
Size-structured differences in resource use stabilize species' coexistence in animal communities, but what behavioral mechanisms underpin these niche differences? Behavior is constrained by morphological and physiological traits that scale allometrically with body size, yet the degree to which...
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Zusammenfassung: | Size-structured differences in resource use stabilize species'
coexistence in animal communities, but what behavioral mechanisms underpin
these niche differences? Behavior is constrained by morphological and
physiological traits that scale allometrically with body size, yet the
degree to which behaviors exhibit allometric scaling remains unclear;
empirical datasets often encompass broad variation in environmental
context and phylogenetic history, which complicates the detection and
interpretation of scaling relationships between size and behavior. We
studied the movement and foraging behaviors of three sympatric, congeneric
spiral-horned antelope species (Tragelaphus spp.) that differ in body
mass—bushbuck (Tragelaphus sylvaticus, 26–40 kg), nyala (Tragelaphus
angasii, 57–83 kg), and greater kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros, 80–142
kg)—in an African savanna ecosystem where (i) food was patchily
distributed due to ecosystem engineering by fungus-farming termites and
(ii) predation risk was low due to the extirpation of several large
carnivores. Because foraging behavior is directly linked to traits that
scale allometrically with size (e.g., metabolic rate, locomotion), we
hypothesized that habitat use and diet selection would likewise exhibit
nonlinear scaling relationships. All three antelope species selected
habitats near termitaria, hotspots of abundant, high-quality forage.
Experimental removal of forage from termite mounds sharply reduced the use
of those mounds by bushbuck, confirming that habitat selection was
resource-driven. Strength of selection for termite mounds scaled
negatively and nonlinearly with body mass, as did recursion (frequency
with which individuals revisited locations), whereas home-range area and
mean step length scaled positively and nonlinearly with body mass. All
species disproportionately ate mound-associated plant taxa; nonetheless,
forage selectivity and dietary composition, richness, and quality all
differed among species, reflecting the partitioning of shared food
resources. Dietary protein exhibited the theoretically predicted negative
allometric relationship with body mass, whereas digestible-energy content
scaled positively. Our results demonstrate cryptic size-based separation
along spatial and dietary niche axes—despite superficial similarities
among species—consistent with the idea that body-size differentiation is
driven by selection for divergent resource-acquisition strategies, which
in turn underpin coexistence. For |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.9ghx3ffks |